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Journal ArticleDOI

Landslide hazard and risk zonation—why is it still so difficult?

TLDR
In this paper, the authors review the problem of attempting to quantify landslide risk over larger areas, discussing a number of difficulties related to the generation of landslide inventory maps including information on date, type and volume of the landslide, the determination of its spatial and temporal probability, the modelling of runout and the assessment of landslide vulnerability.
Abstract
The quantification of risk has gained importance in many disciplines, including landslide studies. The literature on landslide risk assessment illustrates the developments which have taken place in the last decade and that quantitative risk assessment is feasible for geotechnical engineering on a site investigation scale and the evaluation of linear features (e.g., pipelines, roads). However, the generation of quantitative risk zonation maps for regulatory and development planning by local authorities still seems a step too far, especially at medium scales (1:10,000–1:50,000). This paper reviews the problem of attempting to quantify landslide risk over larger areas, discussing a number of difficulties related to the generation of landslide inventory maps including information on date, type and volume of the landslide, the determination of its spatial and temporal probability, the modelling of runout and the assessment of landslide vulnerability. An overview of recent developments in the different approaches to landslide hazard and risk zonation at medium scales is given. The paper concludes with a number of new advances and challenges for the future, such as the use of very detailed topographic data, the generation of event-based landslide inventory maps, the use of these maps in spatial-temporal probabilistic modelling and the use of land use and climatic change scenarios in deterministic modelling.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative Exploration of Statistical Techniques for Landslide Identification and Zonation Mapping and Assessment: A Critical Review

Azeana
TL;DR: In this article , the authors present a review of different statistical techniques for landslide hazard zonation viz. probabilistic, semi-quantitative, quantitative, and heuristic, which are found to be more objective and result-oriented as these techniques involve subjectivity in the assignment of weights to the potential factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Earthquake-triggered landslide susceptibility in Italy by means of Artificial Neural Network

TL;DR: In this article , the authors used the CEDIT catalogue of earthquake-induced ground effects to evaluate the efficiency of an ANN-based susceptibility model to explain the distribution of landslides over the Italian territory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of landslides triggered by the 2013 ML6.5 Nantou, Taiwan, earthquake

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors examined strong earthquake events in Taiwan after the 1999 M w 7.6 Chi-Chi earthquake and targeted the 2013 M l 6.5 Nantou earthquake to create the landslide inventory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of Factors That Predict Adoption of Geomonitoring Systems for Landslide Management

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the factors of adapting a geomonitoring information system for landslides in the cross-border area of Hungary, Slovakia, Ukraine, and Romania.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Landslide hazard evaluation: a review of current techniques and their application in a multi-scale study, Central Italy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used geomorphological information to assess areas at high landslide hazard, and help mitigate the associated risk, and found that despite the operational and conceptual limitations, landslide hazard assessment may indeed constitute a suitable, cost-effective aid to land-use planning.
Journal ArticleDOI

The shuttle radar topography mission—a new class of digital elevation models acquired by spaceborne radar

TL;DR: For 11 days in February 2000, the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) successfully recorded by interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data of the entire land mass of the earth between 60°N and 57°S.
Book

Geographic Information Systems for Geoscientists: Modelling with GIS

TL;DR: An introduction to GIS and tools for map analysis: map pairs, spatial data models, and more.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Rainfall Intensity - Duration Control of Shallow Landslides and Debris Flows

TL;DR: In this article, rainfall intensities and durations associated with shallow landsliding and debris flow activity suggests a limiting threshold for this type of slope instability, and the limit is defined based on the rainfall intensity and duration.
Book

Landslide hazard zonation: A review of principles and practice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give the definitions and principles of landslides, and identify causative conditions and processes (inherent or basic conditions, geology, geomorphology, hydrologic conditions and climate, vegetation, factors that change stress conditions and strength of materials).
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